Glass JEaBJLSl fook _JA&5 _ Copyright N° COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT. \L& <**& THE EARLY YEARS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION IN SAN DOMINGO. PRESENTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE CORNELL UNIVERSITY AS A THESIS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY, JULY, 1889. BY HERBERT ELMER MILLS, Associate Professor of History and Economics in Vassar College. Recently Fellow and Instructor in History \ Cornell University. PRESS OF A. V. HAIOHT, POUGHKEIMIE, H. Y. ni<.Hs-Jn \ hWZ3 . N 1*5 Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1892, by Herbert Elmer Mills, in the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C. PREFACE. The following pages are an attempt to extend the knowl- edge of the French Revolution in its phases out of Paris by a a study of that movement in the chief colony of France at that time. The subject has some interest from the stand- point of American History. Ex-President Andrew D. White of Cornell University, while in San Domingo as United States Commissioner, in 1871, collected a large amount of material bearing upon the history of both the French and Spanish parts of the island. To this material many addi- tions have since been made with generous purchases since I began to use it. This collection and the general sources upon the French Revolution in the White Library have provided me with abundance of material. My chief authority upon the political relations of the colony to France has been the Archives Parlementaires which, edited from the archives by Mm. Mavidal and Laurent, contains much not found in the reports of the proceedings of the National Assembly con- tained in the Moniteur. The latter has been of great assist- ance, giving many letters and news items from the colonies and the commercial cities of France. Both of these funda- mental authorities I have used continually. The next great source has been Garran de Coulon's Rapport sur les Troubles de Saint-Domingue, fait au nom de la Commission des Colonnies des Comite's de Salut Public, de Legislation et de Marine. This work in four volumes, printed by order of the National Convention in the year VI of the Republic is a mine of material otherwise inaccessible. Garran had access to all the minutes and records of the various assemblies of San Domingo and of the organizations in Paris interested in one or another of the colonial factions. He quotes at length from many documents, cites his authorities continually, shows discrimination and a desire to be impartial. He had thorough personal knowledge of the men and events of his 4 Preface. time. He reveals some of the general prejudices of the ex- treme republican era, and from some of his conclusions I have dissented. Most of the general histories of the island were written in the early part of this century or the last of the last century, were based on Garran and have been of little use to me. Rainsford is utterly unreliable ; Edwards and Madiou give little that is new ; Ardouin and Madiou ad- mit that their works are based on Garran for this period. After the three chief sources named, next in importance are the contemporaneous tracts, memoirs, speeches, newspapers and letters. The White Library contains several hundred pamphlets of this sort relating to this subject, all of which I examined. Among them I may mention as especially use- ful the numerous tracts and speeches of Gouy d' Arsy which throw light on the proceedings of the Colonial Committee in France up to the beginning of 1790. I have tried to use these authorities critically, to avoid being misled by the prejudices of the times, and to depend more upon the un- conscious and unfortunate admissions of a man or party in his or its own statements than upon what these documents might say about the opposing party. As a slight excuse for unfortunate style and occasional apparent neglect to con- sider at length divergent views, I may be allowed to say that when submitted as a thesis for the doctorate, this study was nearly twice its present length, but that before printing I found it necessary to shorten by excising many long quota- tions from documents and to condense many discussions. As have so many others, I must express my thanks to Ex-President White for the use of his Library and for his generous additions to it. The use of this library was made possible by the Librarian, Professor George L. Burr from whom I received many valuable suggestions. TABLE OF CONTENTS. INTRODUCTION. Importance of San Domingo 9 Early History and Geography 10 Prosperity in 1789 11 Commercial Restrictions ......... 12 Classes of the Population ......... 13 Prejudices against the People of Color ...... 16 Slaves and their Treatment ........ 19 Government of the Colony ........ 21 Causes of Dissension and Weakness ...... 24 CHAPTER I. San Domingo secures Representation in the National Assembly. Attempts to secure admission to the States General ... 26 The Governor is asked to call Assemblies ..... 28 Unauthorized Assemblies meet ....... 28 Election of deputies ; the cahiers ....... 29 Attempts to secure admission to the States General .... 30 Provisional admission at the Tennis Court 3° Final admission of six delegates ....... 31 The Amis des Noirs .......... 32 Dissensions among the Planters ; the Club Massiac .... 33 CHAPTER II. The People of Color begin Agitation. Renewed Agitation for Abolition of Slavery 34 Attempts of the Planters to secure a Colonial Assembly ... 35 People of Color petition the National Assembly 35 Their Representatives said to have been elected in the Colony . 36 They were actually elected in Paris ....... 37 They are not admitted to the Assembly 38 CHAPTER III. The Beginning of the Revolution in the Colony. Scarcity of food in the Colony 39 Du Chilleau and Marbois 40 The former opens the ports .40 Committees of Correspondence ....... 41 Effect of the Fourteenth of July and the Declaration of Rights . 42 Marbois is obliged to leave the island 43 Early Assemblies and Committees 44 Table of Contents. Origin of the Assembly of the North ; its early acts Legislative bodies formed in the other provinces The attitude of the Governor to the Assemblies The Superior Council and the Assembly of the North Relations of the Governor and the Assemblies Persecution of the People of Color .... Leaders in the North and their quarrels 45 45 46 46 47 47 48 CHAPTER IV. The National Assembly lays down a Constitutional Basis for the Colony. The affairs of the colony are brought before the National Assembly 50 The proposal for a colonial committee rejected . . . . 51 Different views as to the relations of France and the colony . . 52 The ministerial plan for a colonial assembly rejected in the colony . 53 The provincial assemblies agree on a plan 53 Decree of the Eighth of March 54 Objections of the People of Color 55 Instructions of the Twenty-eighth of March 55 The result due to the efforts of the colonial deputation 57 CHAPTER V. The Early Days of the General Assembly. Composition of the Assembly of St. Marc ..... 58 Its early measures .......... 58 Commercial interests antagonistic to it 59 News of the Decree of the Eighth of March 60 Act of the Twenty-eighth of May ....... 61 Provincial Assemblies protest against the General Assembly . . 61 Act of the First of June ......... 62 Instructions of the General Assembly to the Colonial Deputies in Paris .63 Opposition in the Colony to the General Assembly ... 63 The General Assembly sends Commissioners to the North . . 64 Mutual recriminations ......... 64 Relations of the Governor and the General Assembly ... 65 Enemies of the General Assembly unite 65 CHAPTER VI. The Ratification and Dissolution of the General Assembly. The Colony approves the course of the General Assembly . . 66 The Assembly declares itself renewed ...... 67 The troops refuse to obey the General Assembly .... 67 Mauduit 68 Weakness of the General Assembly ....... 69 It opens the ports : and tries to win over the troops ... 69 Mutiny on the Leopard 70 Table of Contents. 7 De Peinier declares the Assembly dissolved 71 Dissolution of the Committee of the West ...... 71 The Assembly of the North proceeds against the General Assembly 72 The General Assembly appeals to the people 72 Strength of the Assembly at St. Marc 73 It sails for France 73 CHAPTER VII. The General Assembly in France. Reception at Brest 74 Its connection with the mutiny at Brest 75 Unpopularity of the General Assembly in France ... 75 It appears before the National Assembly 76 Barnave's report adopted, 12th October 77 The Assembly charged with having plotted independence . . 77 CHAPTER VIII. The People of Color before the Act of the Twelfth of October. Early concessions to them 70 Outrage and persecution 80 The attitude of the General Assembly toward them ... 80 CHAPTER IX. San Domingo after the Departure of the General Assembly. Its cause not lost 82 Dissensions among its enemies 82 The Peace of Leogane 83 The Confederation of the South 83 Weakness of the Assembly of the North 84 Retirement of de Peinier 85 CHAPTER X. Oge's Rebellion. The formation of his plan 86 He reaches San Domingo ,87 Proclaims his purposes 87 Defeated and captured 88 Trial and condemnation 89 Consideration of his real motives 89 CHAPTER XI. The Power of the Government Overthrown. Mutinous troops arrive from France 91 The old and new troops mutiny 92 Death of Mauduit 93 New local governments organized ....... 93 Blanchelande and the Assembly of the North 94 8 Table of Contents. CHAPTER XII. The Decree of the Fifteenth of May, ijqi. Act of the First of February, 1 791 95 The case of the Eighty-five referred to a new committee ... 96 Barnave 96 A conservative act proposed by the new committee ... 97 The debate 97 Rewbell's amendment passed 98 Importance and effect of this act 98 INTRODUCTION. The great struggle between France and England for colo- nial supremacy was, when the French Revolution broke out, practically completed. Napoleon attempted to regain what had been lost, but never did he seriously endanger the posi- tion of England as the mistress of seas and colonies. A century had seen great changes in the relative powers of these great rivals and every war had cost France valuable possessions. Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, India, Canada, are the names of the greater prizes only which were handed over to England ; and in 1763 France, which had once promised to be unquestioned ruler out of Europe as well as in it, could point to but few colonies and these comparatively insignificant. By common consent San Domingo was placed first among French foreign dependencies, particularly on ac- count of its wealth and enormous exports. " Immediately before the Revolution this island had attained a height of prosperity not surpassed in the history of European colonies. The greatest part of its soil was covered by plantations on a gigantic scale, which supplied half Europe with sugar, coffee and cotton. In 1788 it exported produce to the value of 150 million francs to France, four-fifths of which was re- exported to the north of Europe by the French dealers, who were always ready to support the planters, when necessary, with the whole power of their capital. The good fortune of the island had been still further enhanced by the passing of a measure in 1786 by which — contrary to the system of monopoly generally adhered to — the colony was allowed to trade directly with foreign countries. Since that time the planters had doubled their products and a large amount of French capital poured into the island for investment — a hundred millions from Bordeaux alone. The returns were already splendid and still greater were expected. The planters lived like Princes ; all the luxuries of a tropical climate and of European civilization were at their command. On their vast estates they ruled over thousands of negro slaves without feeling any power above them ; and since the emancipation of the American colonies, they had occasion- ally asked themselves why they still remained in dependence on the mother country." 1 1 Von Sybel. History of the French Revolution. Translation. (London, 1867) i., 405, 406. 10 Introduction. The successive steps by which this prosperous condition had been attained form a history which it would be both interesting and profitable to consider did our purpose allow. Founded by those roving spirits, scarcely better than pirates, who followed the Spaniards into the new world, the colony, which then centered on the little island Tortuga but gradu- ally spread over the western half of San Domingo, had an exciting and precarious growth. The original settlers, the Spaniards, did their best to dispossess these bold buccaneers, three times, at least, driving them completely away. But the hardy enterprising plunderers, recognizing allegiance to no country and composed of various nationalities, although principally French and English, invariably returned to their old haunts which so well served their purposes. From their safe harbors they could easily sally forth to plunder the rich commerce of Spain ; the great herds of wild cattle on the plains furnished not only beef but hides which were a profit- able article of commerce. With rulers chosen from their own number and in absolute independence, the buccaneers lived a worthless, happy life, entirely free from restraint of either external power or moral consciousness. It was not until a fierce dissension between the French and English members compelled, that help from the outside was called in. Aided by the French governor at St. Christoph, the former succeeded in expelling the English, and from that time the Anglo-Saxons have never had control of either part of the island. Among the French governors, d* Ogeron merits the first place both for his energy and his wisdom. His efforts, always exerted for the improvement of the moral and social condition of the colonists, resulted in large immi- gration. It was not until the peace of Ryswick in 1697 that the Spanish recognized the French settlement by ceding the western half of the island. From that time the growth of the colony was rapid, the John Law scheme producing in in 1722 the only important rebellion. 8 The French colony, occupying the western end of the island, contained about one-third of its area, and was nearly coextensive with what is now Hayti. It was very irregular in shape, varying in width from twenty to one hundred and seventy miles. Its greatest extent in a north and south line was about one hundred and twenty-five miles. Its soil was * The authorities on the early history'of ^San Domingo are Charlevoix Histoire de V Isle Espagnole ou de S. Domingue (Amsterdam, 1733), 4 vols. ; and Raynal Histoire Philosophique et Politique des £tablisse»tents des Eu- rop/ens dans les deux Indes. (Geneve, 1781), 10 vols. See vols. 6 and 7. Introduction. 1 1 very fertile and for the most part arable. It was well watered and produced luxuriantly tropical fruits and woods. There were three provinces in the colony ; namely, those of the North, of the West and of the South, of which that of the North was the richest and most important. Its princi- pal towns were those of Cap Francais (now Cape Haytien), Port de Paix, and Cap St. Nicholas. Cap Frangais, com- monly known as the Cape, was the seat of the government in time of war, and, says Edwards, " would have ranked for beauty and regularity among the cities of the second class in any part of Europe." 3 The Province of the West was second in importance and contained a number of towns, of which Port-au-Prince, the capital of the island, St. Marc, Leogane, Petit Goave, Gonaives and Croix-des-Bouquets were the largest. The Province of the South was small in area, possessed few towns of importance and no good har- bors. Cayes was its chief mart. In the eighteenth century the importance of a colony was estimated by the amount of its commerce, and particularly by the amount which was carried on with the mother coun- try. From this standpoint France had every reason to be interested in promoting the welfare of San Domingo, for its trade was a constantly increasing source of wealth to her. The student of economic history would find it a profitable subject of investigation to attempt to ascertain the causes for the great disparity in the conditions of the French and of the Spanish parts of the island. The latter, that old Hispaniola of which Columbus gives such charming ac- counts in his letters, whose natural products and mines seemed to promise for the larger Spain inexhaustible wealth, had, during the eighteenth century, shown no growth and was in a wretched condition both as concerned production and commerce ; while the French colony with precisely the same conditions of soil, climate, and distance from Europe had revealed in the seventy years before the Revolution wonderful progress. 4 There were evident signs of increas- ing wealth, happiness and culture. Between 1716 and 1789 the annual imports of France from her American colonies increased from 16,700,000 livres to 185,000,000 livres. 6 The total value of the exports of San Domingo in 1789 3 Edwards, An Historical Survey of the French Colony in the Island of St. Domingo being volume third in The History, Civil and Commercial of the British Colonies in the West Indies. 3 vols. (London, 1801), 159. 4 Garran, Rapport sur les Troubles de Saint-Domingue. 4 vols. (Paris, an VI de la Republique), i., 37. 6 Ibid, i., 37, 38. 12 Introduction. were 175,900,000 francs or about $32,000,000." This was the legal trade, in addition to which there was considerable smuggling carried on. The principal articles of export were sugar to the value of 84,026,726 francs ; coffee, 48,598,276 francs; cotton, 21,012,820 francs ; indigo, 3,607,832 francs, and a large amount of other tropical products.' Of the en- tire amount of imports from the American colonies France consumed only a little over two-fifths, re-exporting the re- mainder. 8 The importance of the commerce with San Do- mingo for the business interests of France led the merchants of Bordeaux and other ports to take an active part in the subsequent struggle of the colony to preserve its commercial rights, and especially in their attempt to prevent any revo- lution in industry by emancipation of the slaves. 9 A certain amount of trade, partly legal and partly illicit was carried on with the Spanish part of the island, with Jamaica and with New England. 10 After the India companies had been dissolved in 1724, trade was in 1727 made free to all French merchants but forbidden to those of other nationalities. The superiority of England's navy during the wars that occupied the suc- ceeding years made starvation inevitable in the island if the prohibition laws were enforced, so that smuggling was con- nived at. This was especially the case during the Seven Years' War when large numbers of slaves died of hunger. In 1767 two ports of entry were established by France in her American colonies, one of them being the Mole St.- Nicholas in San Domingo. Here foreigners could bring only rice, lumber, vegetables and live animals, the importa- tion of salted meats and fish being forbidden. Little relief followed from this measure, owing to the difficulty of com- munication of the greater part of the island with this city, the coasting trade being dangerous. The expenses of car- riage and the extortions of the merchants at this port often quadrupled the price of goods delivered on shipboard as compared with what the planter received. A great earth- quake in 1770 brought terrible famine but no more legisla- 6 Placide- Justin, Histoire Politique et Statisque de V Isle\d' Hayti, Saint- Domingue (Paris, 1826), 505. 1 Table compiled by Wante and given in Dalmas, Histoire de la Revolution de- Saint- Domingue. 2 vols. (Paris, 1814). ii., 294. The figures are for the year 1789. 8 Raynal, vii., 140, 141. 9 Archives Parlementaires, xi., 698,699, 761 ;~xii., 7. 62. Moniteur Uni- versel, 1791, 528. 10 Garran, i.,37. Introduction. 13 tive relief. Then followed the American war, during which the prohibitions were somewhat relaxed in favor of the Anglo-Americans. The smuggling trade became so great that in 1784 the one port of entry was suppressed and the three ports of Cap Francais, Port-au-Prince and St. Louis were opened to the free introduction of lumber, live cattle of all kinds and of salt beef. These regulations were strictly enforced although the governor seems to have been allowed, in case of famine, to open the ports for a short time for the admission of food, with the provision that any regulation to this effect made by him must at once be forwarded to the Minister of Marine for his approval. 11 The population of the colony in 1789 is variously stated by different writers, the estimates varying from that of Garran, who places it at 500,00c) 13 to that of Madiou, 13 whose estimate is 812,000. It is probable that the real number was somewhere between 550,000 and 600,000, including 465,- 000 to 500,000 slaves, 30,000 whites and a third class of free people of color whose numbers probably amounted to from 25,000 to 30,000" although there are the most diverse estimates. The number of slaves was eight or nine times as many as that of the whites. As a large share of the troubles that subsequently arose were caused by the oppos- ing interests of the three castes just mentioned, some knowl- edge of their origin, characteristics and relations must be had. First in influence, wealth and social rank were the white inhabitants of the island. But they were of various sets, whose characteristics and interests were so different as to forbid common description. Oldest in family and most aristocratic in feeling were the Creoles, descended from Frenchmen who had early come to the colony. Although these families could have no pride in their origin, since they were, for the most part, descendants of criminals and women of the lowest character who early sought the island or were banished there, long residence, great wealth and almost un- limited power on their estates had given them the exclusive- ness and haughtiness of bearing which are the distinguish- ing marks of aristocracies. There was a gulf not only be- tween them and the colored people but also between them 11 See Arrets in references 51 and 53. 15 i„ 13. 13 Histoire a" Haiti, 3 vols. (Port-au-Prince, 1847), i., 29. 14 Archives, xxvi., 67,71. Garran, i., 16,18; Madiou, i.,29; Placide- Justin, 144, 145. 14 Introduction. and the whites who had more recently come to the island to hold government positions or for the purpose of gaining a fortune. For the most part planters rather than merchants, living on their large estates with hundreds, even thousands, of slaves ; amusing themselves with frequent fetes at which entertainment was provided by musicians, dancers and actors brought from France ; sending their children to Europe to be educated, after they had reached a stage where the services of European tutors were no longer sufficient ; allying themselves with the noble families of the mother country ; in short, enjoying all the luxuries and charms of life that the combined resources of Europe and the tropical isles could afford, it is not strange that they should have revealed traits of character marking a higher caste, or that the expression " c'est un Creole " should have become in France a common means of designating a very wealthy man. The common traits of the French people seem to have been intensified in the Creoles by the climate and their man- ner of life. They possessed in a high degree love of pleas- ure, sociability, generosity, acuteness, frankness, bravery and fidelity, but they were lazy, frivolous, hot-tempered, im- patient of restraint and toward their inferiors, especially their slaves, arrogant and even cruel. That genius, that love for science and that sense of order that mark the French were not theirs. The Creole women, beautiful, voluptuous, jealous, shy with strangers but wholly uncon- strained with their friends, were indolent and passionate even to old age. 16 The position of the Creoles in the colony was somewhat similar to that of the southern planters of the United States before the civil war, and in more than one respect the likeness extended to personal traits. Another aristocratic class of whites rested its claim to su- periority on a different basis from that of the Creole. This was the official class sent out for the government of the island. They were charged with despotic rule, were fre- quently ignorant of the welfare of the colony and had all that cool assumption of superiority and that disdain for those around them which so commonly mark the man of the metropolis when in the provinces. In the cities were to be found also the merchants who, im- pelled by a desire to make a fortune, came to San Domingo, since it was the only considerable colony left to France and because its immense commerce promised opportunities for 16 Hillard d'Auberteuil, Considerations sur I' Etat Present dc la Colonie Franfaise de Saint-Domingue. 2 vols. (Paris, 1777), ii., 25 seqq, Introduction. 1 5 amassing wealth which could no where else be found by a Frenchman. While the Creoles lived in the country and were content to take life easily enjoying it from day to day, the more recent comers to the island made up the greater part of the city population. The merchants were, for the most part, young men who had lost fortunes and character in France, bankrupts, fugitive monks, retired officers, priests tired of their profession. In a class where a ruined set so greatly predominated we cannot expect to find many virtues. Their position was in some respects like that of the Ameri- can miners of 1848 who in a strange country for the sake of making fortunes, had no reputation to sustain and subjected themselves to no restraint. But in San Domingo the en- vironment both natural and social led to indulgence in vice that took other lines than among the gold hunters. Toward the slaves they exhibited the greatest harshness and cruelties ; their slave girls were their concubines, but the po- sition of these unfortunates was not accompanied by the ease and luxury which are to such women the usual com- pensation for their loss of virtue ; they were made to work as long as the day lasted, were insufficiently clad and were deprived of the money which they earned by prostitution. 16 Among a class which could tolerate such a low state of morals there could have been little of that strength of char- acter so greatly needed in the ensuing years. About equal to the planters in numbers, there was a third class of the whites, making up the bulk of the city population. They were commonly called the Petit s-B lanes. They were largely artisans but among them were included inn-keepers, small merchants, slave overseers and many of no particular calling. The artisans who had first come to the island, had come bound to service for a term of years and were known as engage's. The memory of this forced service had begot- ten a kind of contempt for all whites who earned their living by manual labor, and they were despised not alone by the planters but by the people of color. 17 In their number were also adventurers and many who had fled from Europe to escape punishment for their crimes. They were of different countries, for the most part without property, and ready for any revolution. In the scenes that followed they were con- spicuous. 18 16 Hilliard d' Auberteuil, ii., 33 seqq. 11 This expression is used not as a euphemism for negroes and mulattoes but as a technical definite term for all free negroes and mulattoes. 18 Garran, i., pp. 20,21. La Croix, Me'moires pour servir a £ Histoire de la Revolution de Saint-Domingue. 2 vols. (Paris, 1819), i., 20, 21. Raimond, 1 6 Introduction. The nature of the climate, and the disinclination and in- ability of the European whites to marry had led to a very universal cohabitation of the whites with the colored women. From these unlawful unions had sprung a large class of mu- lattoes of all shades of color and degree of blood mixture. As early as the time of Louis XIV, by the Black Code pub- lished in 1685, that monarch had attempted by heavy fines and manumission to put an end to this rapidly increasing concubinage. It was provided that in such cases the slave and her children should become free. 19 But the edict seems to have been of little effect and at the outbreak of the Revolution, the number of free mulattoes and free negroes was nearly equal to that of the whites. Some of these had bought their freedom, others had received it as a reward for long and faithful service, but for the most part their liberty was simply a result of dishonor. " The sweet promptings of nature, which makes itself felt even by the harshest ty- rants, have rarely allowed the whites to leave in slavery the fruits of their union with the negro race." The custom of manumission had become so common that Hilliard d' Au- berteuil, who favored a recognized concubinage in order to escape the evils of public prostitution, 30 devotes a whole chapter to a discussion of this question and strongly advo- cates restriction or prohibition of manumission. He main- tains that the good order of the colony and its success de- pends upon preserving the various ranks of the people and upon holding the people of color in subjection. However, no such regulation had been made and these unfortunate creatures had attained a considerable degree of material prosperity and of intelligence. So strong has become the social prejudice against the colored people in our day that it may seem entirely unneces- sary to say that such existed in the French colony of San Domingo. The separation between the races and the feel- ing against miscegenation are now so marked that we can scarcely imagine that the Caucasian and negro once associ- ated on terms of comparative equality, yet it is asserted by one whose statements are worthy of credence, 111 that in the M/moire sur les Causes des Troubles et des D/sastres de la Colonie de Saint-Do- mingue. (Paris, 1793) 8, 9. 19 Code Noir, article 9, as given in Madiou, iii., 443. 5n ii., 4 8. 21 Raimond. Observations sur V Origineet les Progr